China’s biggest solar-powered drone completes first test flight
- Morning Star 50 took off from an airport in Shaanxi and landed 26 minutes later, according to state media
- Its chief designer says it will work as a ‘pseudo-satellite’ to carry out operations at altitudes above 20km

Morning Star 50 took off from an airport in Shaanxi province at 5.50pm on Saturday and landed 26 minutes later after a smooth flight, according to the official Science and Technology Daily.
The twin-fuselage drone has a 50-metre (164ft) wingspan and could have a range of uses – from high-altitude surveillance to forest fire monitoring and communications.
It is powered entirely by solar panels, which cover most of its wings, and will work as a “pseudo-satellite” to carry out operations at altitudes above 20km (65,600ft), chief designer Zhu Shengli told the newspaper.
Zhu, with the state-owned Aviation Industry Corporation of China, said the drone could remain airborne for months or even years. No further details of the drone were given.
Unmanned aerial vehicles like Morning Star 50 are much cheaper and more flexible to launch and operate than satellites.
Its development will strengthen China’s defences in space and at sea, and it could also be used in conjunction with key technologies in fields such as renewable energy, new materials and aeronautical engineering, according to the report.
